Ace Mystery was a weird menace pulp magazine which published three issues starting in 1936, followed by two more under the title Detective Romances.

Quick Facts Editor, First issue ...
Ace Mystery
Thumb
Cover of the third issue, by Rafael De Soto[1]
EditorHarry Widmer
First issue1936 (1936)
Final issue
Number

3
CompanyPeriodical House
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Ace Mystery was published by Periodical House and edited by Harry Widmer. Writers who appeared in the magazine included Frederick C. Davis, who wrote all three lead novels, Hugh B. Cave, and Robert C. Blackmon; magazine historian Michael Cook comments that these were capable writers, but the rest of the magazine was too low-quality to succeed.[citation needed]

Some of the stories were fantasy rather than weird menace -- for example, one story was about a sculptor who could shrink dead bodies. Science fiction historian Mike Ashley is more positive than Cook, describing the magazine as "of reasonably good quality", and singling out Charles Marquis Warren's "Coyote Woman" for praise; Ashley quotes pulp historian Robert K. Jones, who considered the "Coyote Woman"...among the most effective vampire stories to appear in the pulps".[2][3]

Bibliographic details

The publisher, Periodical House, was a subsidiary of Ace Magazines of New York; the issues under the Ace Mystery title were dated May-June, July-August, and September-October 1936.[2] The two Detective Romances titles were dated November 1936 and January 1937.[1] The editor was Harry Widmer; the magazine was in pulp format, 128 pages, and priced at 10 cents.[2]

References

Sources

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